tiffin in English

noun
1
a light meal, especially lunch.
The business of delivering dabbas - also known as tiffins , from an Anglo-Indian word for ‘lunch’ - began more than a century ago, reputedly at the request of a hungry English administrator.
noun

Use "tiffin" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tiffin" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tiffin", or refer to the context using the word "tiffin" in the English Dictionary.

1. Benchwarmers Restaurant – Tiffin, OH

2. For Tiffin Ohio community and local news, trust Advertiser-Tribune

3. After Official Trailer (2019) Josephine Langford, Hero Fiennes Tiffin Movie HD

4. And it is their sorting procedure that has made the tiffin wales so famous.

5. Gold Rush Allegros is a Northern California based Chapter of the Tiffin Motorhome sponsored International Allegro Club*

6. Manesh says that even with very little publicity, 10-15 people have been enquiring about the tiffin wala service everyday.

7. Having been gone from Tiffin for about a decade now, it was super cool on my return to find Bailiwicks Coffee Company on South Washington Street

8. Tiffin MSc in Criminal Justice (MSCJ), with a concentration in Homeland Security Administration, is an outstanding example of how the real world meets the classr...

9. Tiffin MSc in Criminal Justice (MSCJ), with a concentration in Forensic Psychology, is an outstanding example of how the real world meets the classroom experience.

10. The Empire Writes Back, by Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin, at first time from perspective post-colonial theory, makes an interpretation on colonial literature.

11. I visited Bailiwicks Coffee Company in downtown Tiffin for the first time last month to really enjoy it, meeting a number of people to talk over community branding strategy

12. Current pro- and Antivivisectionist arguments and campaigns are motored by the rhetorical possibilities afforded by the likeness / difference dilemma, obviating the matter that, as Huggan and Tiffin contend, it is not so much the animals themselves that pose a problem for postcolonial civilizations, but rather our representation of them.